Craftwork Episode 24: Building Communities, Finding Guardrails, & Reading the Comments Section w/ Jean Marc Ah-Sen

Listen to Craftwork Episode 24: Building Communities, Finding Guardrails, & Reading the Comments Section w/ Jean Marc Ah-Sen.

In this interview, we chat with Jean Marc Ah-Sen about comic books, literary scenes, flipping the script on what a book can be, and so much more. 

Jean Marc Ah-Sen is the author of Grand Menteur, In the Beggarly Style of Imitation, and Kilworthy Tanner. His writing has appeared in McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern, Literary Hub, Catapult, The Comics Journal, Maclean’s, The Walrus, and elsewhere. 

Books mentioned in this episode: 

  • The Fall – Albert Camus 
  • I Dreamed I Was a Very Clean Tramp – Richard Hell 
  • The Talented Mr. Ripley – Patricia Highsmith 
  • Intimacy – Hanif Kureishi 
  • Biography of X – Catherine Lacey 
  • Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle – Vladimir Nabokov  
  • Anti-Woo: The Lifeman’s Improved Primer for Non-Lovers; The Theory and Practice of Gamesmanship: Or the Art of Winning Games Without Actually Cheating – Stephen Potter 
  • Lobotomy: Surviving the Ramones – Dee Dee Ramone 
  • Endling – Maria Reva 
  • The Dying Animal – Philip Roth 
  • Striptease – Georges Simenon 
  • The Handyman Method – Andrew Sullivan 
  • Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy 
  • The Island of Doctor Moreau; The Time Machine – H. G. Wells 

Calm and Chaos: An Interview with Rebeccah Love by Mike Thorn (In Review Online)

Preceded by RipeParlour Palm, and A Woman’s BlockEve’s Parade is filmmaker Rebeccah Love’s final entry in a quartet of films depicting women who struggle against societal expectations, fall into madness, and recover with the help of neighbours. The first three films in this quartet have played through TIFF, VIFF, FNC, and CBC; been featured in the Montreal Gazette, the Psychiatric Eye (the Royal College of Psychiatry’s quarterly publication, UK); and premiered alongside talks by CAMH’s Chief Psychiatrists. In May, Love has been invited to deliver talks in London and Cambridge, UK through the NHS and residents’ associations about her creative depictions of psychosis and her vision for community crisis care.

Eve Parade will premiere on April 16 at the Paradise Theatre in Toronto. Author and film critic Mike Thorn sat down with Love to discuss her political and artistic visions, aesthetics, and form in Eve’s Parade, and her quartet’s various thematic concerns.

Read Thorn’s interview with Love.

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